Deputy Governor, Bank of Uganda, Dr. Michael Atingi-Ego
The Deputy Governor of the central bank, during the reading of the Monetary Policy Statement for December 2024, responded to questions concerning the recent claims of a hack into BoU’s payment systems.
In his response, the Deputy Governor, Dr. Michael Atingi-Ego said that “It is not correct to say that the BOU IT systems were hacked because hacking is the act of gaining unauthorized access to computer systems or networks, and to date, there is no evidence of unauthorized access to the BOU IT systems to divert funds.”
According to Dr. Atingi-Ego, the fraud incidents were initiated outside the BOU IT systems and instructions were received by BOU to pay wrong beneficiaries leading to the subsequent diversion of funds.
“Where the diversion took place, how, and who were involved, is the subject matter of the ongoing investigation. Be rest assured the Bank’s IT systems remain fully operational, secure, and uncompromised,” added the Deputy Governor.
The payment transactions in question included a payment to the World Bank of US$6,134,137.75, which was instead paid to Roadway Co. Limited through MUFG Bank of Japan on September 12, 2024. Additionally, a payment to the African Development Fund of $8,596,824.26 was mistakenly paid to MJS International, London, UK on September 28, 2024.
Upon discovering that the payments had not reached the intended beneficiaries (World Bank and African Development Fund), BoU immediately commenced internal investigations and reported the matter to relevant government agencies, including the Uganda Police, and Financial Intelligence Authority.
“We are also cooperating with the Office of the Auditor General. BoU also took necessary steps to recover the funds, instructing our Correspondent Bank, Citibank N.A., and the banks where the funds had been sent to freeze the said funds due to suspected fraud. We have since recovered US$8,205,133.84 of the funds sent to MJS International, London, UK, which has been credited to the Consolidated Fund. We are also pursuing the balance of US$391,660.45 through our Correspondent Bank,” the Bank said in a statement on Thursday.
However, BoU has not yet recovered the amount paid to Roadway Co. Ltd through MUFG Bank of Japan. While MUFG Bank has not been very cooperative, the Bank of Uganda said that “We continue to work with our domestic and international partners to pursue the recovery of these funds.”
“We also expect ongoing investigations to support our recovery efforts and help us understand the full extent of these fraudulent transactions.”
The Central Bank says that “The Bank of Uganda is cooperating with relevant authorities to provide the information needed to conclude the investigations.”
“To the best of our knowledge, no BoU staff member has been implicated thus far,” said the Central Bank.
The Bank of Uganda asked “The public to remain patient and allow the relevant government agencies to conclude their investigations.”
“BoU will issue a comprehensive report on the incident once the investigations are complete. For now, we recommend sourcing any information related to ongoing investigations from the relevant government investigative agencies to avoid misinformation.”